Payrolls swell by 243,000 in February; pay increases
U.S. Employers Expect to Keep Hiring in 2nd Qtr, Manpower Says
US jobless claims fall unexpectedly last week
Strong US jobs report likely, Monster.com predicts
Solid jobs growth in March, U.S. Payrolls grew by 211,000
Fed's Poole Says Economy on `Solid Track,' Inflation Still Under Control
US economy's latest output: better jobs
Weekly jobless claims fall sharply
US economy firing on all cylinders: data
Economy creates 138,000 jobs in April; average hourly earnings jump 0.5%
June nonfarm payrolls rise 121,000, Average hourly earnings up 3.9% in past year
Not too bad, unemployment ticked up a bit to 4.8%, although the inflation fears are still real, but otherwise looks good.
U.S. Employers Expect to Keep Hiring in 2nd Qtr, Manpower Says
US jobless claims fall unexpectedly last week
Strong US jobs report likely, Monster.com predicts
Solid jobs growth in March, U.S. Payrolls grew by 211,000
Fed's Poole Says Economy on `Solid Track,' Inflation Still Under Control
US economy's latest output: better jobs
Weekly jobless claims fall sharply
US economy firing on all cylinders: data
Economy creates 138,000 jobs in April; average hourly earnings jump 0.5%
June nonfarm payrolls rise 121,000, Average hourly earnings up 3.9% in past year
WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? Employers added a stronger-than-forecast 243,000 jobs in February but the unemployment rate edged up, the Labor Department said Friday in a report that left analysts divided about whether inflation was heating up.
The unemployment rate inched up to 4.8% from a 4½-year low of 4.7% in January. The bump-up in the jobless rate came as people ? feeling better about job prospects ? applied for work in droves.
Economists had forecast 210,000 jobs would be created in February and the unemployment rate would hold steady.
Average hourly earnings grew 0.3% during February, in line with expectations, but in the 12 months through February pay rose 3.5%, which department officials said was the highest annual increase since September 2001.
While wage growth is good for workers, a big pickup in wages? if sustained? can stir fears about inflation among economists and at the Federal Reserve.
The February job gain followed a revised 170,000 new jobs in January that was originally reported as 193,000. Employers have increased their payrolls every month for the past 2½ years, a sign that economic growth is vigorous enough to keep policymakers on edge about the possibility of inflationary wage and price rises.
Economist Richard DeKaser of National City in Cleveland said the report shows the labor market "continues to grow but not at an explosive pace" and said that might temper Federal Reserve concerns about wage pressures.
"We do see a bump-up in hourly earnings," DeKaser said. "We have established a clear two-year upward trend. The workweek actually dipped a little bit, which offset the rise in earnings."
The average workweek in February was 33.7 hours, down from 33.8 hours in January.
Some analysts described the wage data as troubling.
"The only issue is the wage number which does suggest there will be some upside bias on inflation, and it will keep the Fed raising rates," said economist John Silvia at Wachovia in Charlotte "The probability for a hike in May will increase."
The Federal Reserve has pushed interest rates up 14 times in quarter percentage point increments since mid-2004, bringing the U.S. central bank's bellwether federal funds rate to 4.5%. Many analysts foresee the rate rising to 5% by July, noting that policymakers have commented upon the economy's momentum and the need to keep inflation in check.
The report showed that another 41,000 construction jobs were added in February, on top of 55,000 in January. Some economists had expected hiring for construction to ease more sharply last month with a return to colder weather after an exceptionally mild January. Manufacturing employment, by contrast, declined 1,000 in February after growing 7,000 in January.
Not too bad, unemployment ticked up a bit to 4.8%, although the inflation fears are still real, but otherwise looks good.